...
As the romance of manned space exploration has waned, the drive today is
to find our living, thinking counterparts in the universe. For all the
excitement, however, the search betrays a profound melancholy — a lonely
species in a merciless universe anxiously awaits an answering voice
amid utter silence.
...
That silence is maddening. Not just because it compounds our feeling of
cosmic isolation. But because it makes no sense. As we inevitably find
more and more exo-planets where intelligent life can exist, why have we found no evidence — no signals, no radio waves — that intelligent life does exist?
It’s called the Fermi Paradox, after the great physicist who once asked, “Where is everybody?” Or as was once elaborated: “All our logic, all our anti-isocentrism, assures us that we are not unique — that they must be there. And yet we do not see them.”
How
many of them should there be? Modern satellite data suggest the number
should be very high. So why the silence? Carl Sagan (among others)
thought that the answer is to be found, tragically, in the high
probability that advanced civilizations destroy themselves.
In
other words, this silent universe is conveying not a flattering lesson
about our uniqueness but a tragic story about our destiny. It is telling
us that intelligence may be the most cursed faculty in the entire
universe — an endowment not just ultimately fatal but, on the scale of
cosmic time, near instantly so.
This is not mere theory. Look around. On the very same day that
astronomers rejoiced at the discovery of the two Earth-size planets, the
National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity urged two leading
scientific journals not to publish details of lab experiments that just
created a lethal and highly transmittable form of bird-flu virus, lest
that fateful knowledge fall into the wrong hands.
Wrong hands,
human hands. This is not just the age of holy terror, but also the
threshold of an age of hyper-proliferation. Nuclear weapons in the hands
of half-mad tyrants (North Korea) and radical apocalypticists (Iran)
are just the beginning. Lethal biologic agents may soon find their way
into the hands of those for whom genocidal pandemics loosed upon
infidels are the royal road to redemption.
And forget the
psychopaths: Why, just 17 years after Homo sapiens discovered atomic
power, those most stable and sober states, the United States and the
Soviet Union, came within inches of mutual annihilation.
...
Intelligence is a capacity so godlike, so protean that it must be
contained and disciplined. This is the work of politics — understood as
the ordering of society and the regulation of power to permit human
flourishing while simultaneously restraining the most Hobbesian human
instincts.
There could be no greater irony: For all the sublimity
of art, physics, music, mathematics, and other manifestations of human
genius, everything depends on the mundane, frustrating, often debased
vocation known as politics (and its most exacting subspecialty —
statecraft). Because if we don’t get politics right, everything else
risks extinction.
Charles Krauthammer
PS: Destaques meus.
1 comentário:
,the high probability that advanced civilizations destroy themselves" .
pois é ,tendo em conta as 300 toneladas de material radioactivo que são lançados por dia no pacifico desde o acidente nuclear de Fukushima parece que o fum desta civilização está por um fio .
isto vai contaminar toda a cadeia alimentar , começa nos peixe e por aí fora. não vai ser preciso meteorito , afinal.
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